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appalachiablue

(41,131 posts)
Fri Dec 18, 2020, 09:01 PM Dec 2020

Clever Ways of Hiding Booze During Prohibition, 1920-1933



From 1920 to 1933, the United States placed a nationwide constitutional ban on the production, importation, transportation, and sale of alcoholic beverages. But that didn't stop people from smuggling booze in a variety of creative ways. In today's Weird History explainer, we explore interesting facts about the prohibition era and how Americans snuck around the no booze rule.
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Clever Ways of Hiding Booze During Prohibition, 1920-1933 (Original Post) appalachiablue Dec 2020 OP
My dad hid some bottles in his suitcase when he was to drive back from n. Texas to UT-Austin. But Karadeniz Dec 2020 #1
Whoa, nerves of steel with that cargo and rider, lol appalachiablue Dec 2020 #2
My Grandfather was selling it and, when chased by the cops, threw bottles out the car window as JudyM Dec 2020 #3
That's wild, he must have been a character! appalachiablue Dec 2020 #4
Just noticed this thread. wnylib Feb 2021 #5

Karadeniz

(22,516 posts)
1. My dad hid some bottles in his suitcase when he was to drive back from n. Texas to UT-Austin. But
Fri Dec 18, 2020, 09:29 PM
Dec 2020

Then his father arranged for a Texas Ranger to drive with him. Dad said it took everything to seem calm, chatty and innocent for all those hours in a bumpy car!

JudyM

(29,241 posts)
3. My Grandfather was selling it and, when chased by the cops, threw bottles out the car window as
Fri Dec 18, 2020, 11:02 PM
Dec 2020

he raced around corners.

wnylib

(21,451 posts)
5. Just noticed this thread.
Sat Feb 6, 2021, 12:59 AM
Feb 2021

I got this family story from my grandfather.

He ran a still in the woods on his farm. Neighboring farmers and some town people bought from him. On weekends, people gathered at his house for drinking and dancing while my grandmother played popular tunes on the piano. Word got around, eventually, to the ATF feds.

A black car with men in suits stopped in front of the farmhouse and asked my father, who was 8 at the time, if he knew where Mr. WNYlib lived. My father invited them inside and sent his sister to get their father from the fields. While they waited, my father imitated his parents' hospitality and offered drinks to the feds, bragging that his daddy made the best whiskey.

My grandfather said he might have talked his way out of the situation if my father hadn't handed over the evidence.

When I asked my father about it, he said he had no idea that it wasn't legal since it seemed normal to him. Also, he was impressed by the shiny new black car and men in suits on a weekday, which never happened on farms. He figured they were important and rich. Since they knew his father's name, he thought they might be relatives he had not known before.

After arrest and a guilty plea, grandpa paid a fine and went home.

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